Chrome hack teenager awarded $60,000 by Google at Pwnium

Google has awarded $60,000 to a security researcher who cracked Chrome at the search firm's second "Pwnium" hacking contest.

Google has awarded $60,000 to a security researcher who cracked Chrome at the search firm's second "Pwnium" hacking contest.

The researcher, a teenager who goes by the nickname "Pinkie Pie," was a returning winner: Last March, he was one of two who each won $60,000 for hacking the Chrome browser at Google's inaugural challenge.

Pwnium 2 took place at the Hack In The Box security conference this week in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Google made news two months ago when it announced the follow-up contest, saying then that it would put as much as $2 million on the line.

Pinkie Pie's $60,000 was the only reward handed out at Pwnium 2.

"This exploit relied on a WebKit Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) compromise to exploit the renderer process and a second bug in the IPC layer to escape the Chrome sandbox," Chris Evans, a Chrome software engineer, said on the Chromium blog yesterday. "Since this exploit depends entirely on bugs within Chrome to achieve code execution, it qualifies for our highest award level."

IPC stands for "inter-process communication," and is the technology used in Chrome to allow multiple active browser processes to "talk" to each other.

Google promised it would reveal more information about Pinkie Pie's exploit once other WebKit-built browsers - Apple's Safari also relies on the open source WebKit engine - have been updated.

Earlier this year, Google delayed disclosing technical details about the March Pwnium hacks by Pinkie Pie and Sergey Glazunov until late May.

As he did last March, Jason Kersey, a Chrome program manager, called Pinkie Pie's hack a "beautiful work of art."

Google today patched the Chrome vulnerabilities Pinkie Pie used during the contest, and boasted of its turn-around time.

"We started analysing the exploit as soon as it was submitted, and in fewer than 10 hours after Pwnium 2 concluded we were updating users with a freshly-patched version of Chrome," Evans said.